SEO and content marketing are different marketing channels. But you don’t have to choose between them. They’re complementary.
In fact, you should combine them for greater effectiveness in your marketing.
How do we do what we do? Believe it or not, there’s a method to the madness. Here’s one line that summarizes our entire SEO content marketing strategy:
We create and maintain high-quality, product-led, search-focused content about topics with business potential and search traffic potential.
Let me break down how we combine SEO and content marketing:
If you want to acquire search traffic, you need to target topics that your potential customers are searching for.
The easiest way to find these keywords is to use a keyword tool like Ahrefs’ Keywords Explorer:
- Go to Keywords Explorer
- Enter a few broad keywords related to your site or niche
- Go to the Matching terms report
- Filter for keywords with traffic potential (TP)
Sidenote.
Traffic Potential is the estimated monthly organic search traffic to the top-ranking page for a keyword. Since pages tend to rank for many keywords, Traffic Potential is a more reliable estimate than search volume.
Go through the report and pick out the keywords that are relevant to your site. For example, if I were an ecommerce store selling coffee equipment, this could be a potential keyword to target:
Further reading
A keyword’s business potential is how easy it will be to pitch your product while covering a certain topic. It’s our ‘trade secret’—it’s why we can easily introduce our product and its features in every piece of content we create.
Here’s how to score a topic’s business potential:
So, taking the above example, the topic “best coffee grinder” would score a “3” (provided we sell coffee grinders) whereas a topic like “does decaf coffee have caffeine” would score a “1” or even a “0”.
You should prioritize topics that score high on business potential, i.e. a “2” or a “3”.
What does all of the jargon mean? Let’s break it down.
Search-focused
Part one of being ‘search-focused’ is finding keywords that people are searching for. Part two is to figure out why they’re searching for those particular keywords. This ‘why’ is known as search intent.
Given that Google’s goal is to always rank the most relevant content, we can look at the search engine results (SERPs) to uncover search intent. Take your target keyword, enter it into Keywords Explorer, scroll down to SERP Overview, and click Identify intents:
So, we can see that searchers looking for the keyword “best coffee grinders” want detailed reviews and expert recommendations on the best coffee grinders. Not only that, we can also see that searchers want a list that is fresh.
If we’re targeting this topic, making it search-focused means matching this search intent—we’ll need to create a list of the best coffee grinders for the current year.
Further reading
Product-led
Product-led means ensuring you’re not just creating content for the sake of it; you’re also ‘selling’ your product. You want to be aware of which use case, feature, or service you want to weave into the narrative. Naturally, of course.
Scoring a topic’s business potential would have done 90% of the work here. If you’re creating content about a topic that scored a “3”, then your product pitch would be natural. For example, we could easily add links back to our coffee equipment store after covering the best coffee grinders. Or, if we make our coffee grinders, we could pitch them as one of the best. (That’s why I say the business potential score is our secret ingredient.)
The challenge comes when you’re covering topics that score a “1” or “0”. It’s not impossible, but you’ll need to be creative.
For example, I recently covered the topic “SEO specialist”. It had a business potential of “1” and was tough to include a product pitch. Fortunately, I noticed that some job listings asked for experience with different SEO toolsets (including us.) It was the perfect segue to introduce our product and certification course.
Further reading
High-quality
This is subjective. Everyone’s standards are different. But here’s how we think of quality:
- Accurate — No hype, no lying. Every statement we make should be as accurate as possible.
- Clear — No fluff—delete all unnecessary words and sentences. Use jargon only when needed. When necessary, create illustrations to expand on ideas and concepts.
- Helpful — Being product-led is important but the content should not just be aimed at pitching. The content should be focused primarily on helping visitors solve their problems, while creatively weaving our product into the context.
- Unique — One way to make your content unique is to have skin in the game—conduct experiments, run data studies, and write from personal experience. If having skin is difficult, then interview practitioners. Focus on did, not could.
something i always look for when assessing the credibility of writing:
could/should/did
~ could: most writers talk about things you, the reader, could do. theoretical. abstract. based on no firsthand experience. should probably be disregarded. prime “content marketing”…
— Ryan Law (@thinking_slow) December 6, 2023
Further reading
The deterioration of your content is inevitable:
- Search-focused — Your rankings may drop because of competitors. Or you didn’t even rank the first time round. Or your target topic’s search intent changed (e.g., the word corona’s search intent changed during the void years of 2020-2022.)
- Product-led — You may have new features, services, or use cases to introduce. Or your team has depreciated certain features or abandoned some services.
- High-quality — Statements may become inaccurate over time. Or your unique idea was so successful that everyone else copied you (and outranked you.) Or you might have better ways to reword sentences and paragraphs. Or just simply the ideas, screenshots, and content has become outdated.
That’s why you don’t build a train track and disappear. You have to actively maintain it to keep it working. (I’m looking at you London tube.) Same goes for your content.
The way to maintain your content is to conduct regular content audits. We do this every quarter—Each writer on our blog team goes through their portfolio of articles and selects at least three pieces to update. Each writer may also choose a couple to do a full rewrite.
I highly recommend going through our content audit template so you can see what went wrong with your content and what to do with it next.
Further reading
Final thoughts
SEO and content marketing may be different marketing types, but that doesn’t mean you need to do one to the exclusion of the other.
Both channels are highly compatible and as you see above, can be designed as an entire strategy that hits all important marketing objectives.
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